Dancing Days is a 1926 American silent drama film directed by Albert H. Kelley and starring Helene Chadwick, Forrest Stanley and Lillian Rich.[1][2] It is based on the 1910 novel of the same name by the British writer J.J. Bell. The films depicts a married man who falls in love with a flapper, and is increasingly dominated by his new love interest.
Dancing Days | |
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Directed by | Albert H. Kelley |
Written by | Dorothy Cairns |
Based on | Dancing Days by J.J. Bell |
Produced by | J.G. Bachmann |
Starring | Helene Chadwick Forrest Stanley Lillian Rich |
Cinematography | H. Lyman Broening |
Production company | B.P. Schulberg Productions |
Distributed by | Preferred Pictures |
Release date | September 27, 1926 |
Running time | 65 minutes |
Country | United States |
Languages | Silent English intertitles |
After ten years of marriage to Alice, Ralph Hedman is introduced by his brother to the flapper Lillian Loring and his eye begins to wander. The new woman seems to have complete control over him. When he falls ill, she tries to recover him by getting him to dance the Charleston. Alice accepts defeat, but a chance car accident brings them back together.
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